Bus Driver Who Deliberately Hit Cyclist Sent to Prison

The bus driver who, in a moment of road rage, swerved his bus to
knock a cyclist off the road will spend the next 17 months in prison for
his actions, a court in England has ruled.

Gavin Hill, 29, of Frome in Somerset, England, described his actions
as a “moment of madness” while pleading guilty to dangerous driving and
causing grievous bodily harm in court on Thursday.

A bus driver for 10 years, Hill was driving a Bugler Coaches bus the
morning of April 5, 2011, when he drove too close to cyclist Phillip
Mead as the two approached the St. James Barton roundabout in Bristol.

At the next traffic light, Mead, 43, pulled up next to Hill’s bus and
the two engaged in a heated argument before going their separate ways,
according to arguments presented in court.

Cameras monitoring the intersection captured the next moments when
Hill accelerated his bus to try to overtake Mead and then sharply
swerved to the left to knock Mead off his bike.

Mead, a father-of-two who was cycling to work that morning, was
knocked off his bike and suffered a broken leg, fractured wrist and
thumb, according to the BBC.

During the sentencing, Judge Mark Horton said the incident “was not
an accident,” and told Hill, “You used the bus as a weapon to bully and
intimidate Mr. Mead.”

Mead spent two weeks in the hospital undergoing surgeries to repair
his injuries and spent months in rehabilitation but says his injuries
could have been worse.

“Without my helmet, it could have been a lot worse. I could have
been killed,” he told the Daily Mail. “It goes to show how one bit of
rage can affect so many people’s lives.”

Despite everything, Mead also expressed sympathy toward Hill.

“I do not feel any anger towards him now,” he told the Daily Mail. “In fact, I feel really sorry for his family.”

In addition to his prison sentence, Hill was fired from his job with
Bugler Coaches and disqualified from driving for two-and-a-half years.

He could be freed from jail much earlier than 17 months, however,
after Judge Horton ruled that he could be considered for release after
serving only half of his sentence.